6,609 research outputs found

    First-Matsubara-frequency rule in a Fermi liquid. Part I: Fermionic self-energy

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    We analyze in detail the fermionic self-energy \Sigma(\omega, T) in a Fermi liquid (FL) at finite temperature T and frequency \omega. We consider both canonical FLs -- systems in spatial dimension D >2, where the leading term in the fermionic self-energy is analytic [the retarded Im\Sigma^R(\omega,T) = C(\omega^2 +\pi^2 T^2)], and non-canonical FLs in 1<D <2, where the leading term in Im\Sigma^R(\omega,T) scales as T^D or \omega^D. We relate the \omega^2 + \pi^2 T^2 form to a special property of the self-energy -"the first-Matsubara-frequency rule", which stipulates that \Sigma^R(i\pi T,T) in a canonical FL contains an O(T) but no T^2 term. We show that in any D >1 the next term after O(T) in \Sigma^R(i\pi T,T) is of order T^D (T^3\ln T in D=3). This T^D term comes from only forward- and backward scattering, and is expressed in terms of fully renormalized amplitudes for these processes. The overall prefactor of the T^D term vanishes in the "local approximation", when the interaction can be approximated by its value for the initial and final fermionic states right on the Fermi surface. The local approximation is justified near a Pomeranchuk instability, even if the vertex corrections are non-negligible. We show that the strength of the first-Matsubara-frequency rule is amplified in the local approximation, where it states that not only the T^D term vanishes but also that \Sigma^R(i\pi T,T) does not contain any terms beyond O(T). This rule imposes two constraints on the scaling form of the self-energy: upon replacing \omega by i\pi T, Im\Sigma^R(\omega,T) must vanish and Re\Sigma^R (\omega, T) must reduce to O(T). These two constraints should be taken into consideration in extracting scaling forms of \Sigma^R(\omega,T) from experimental and numerical data.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figure

    A scalable, high-speed measurement-based quantum computer using trapped ions

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    We describe a scalable, high-speed, and robust architecture for measurement-based quantum-computing with trapped ions. Measurement-based architectures offer a way to speed-up operation of a quantum computer significantly by parallelizing the slow entangling operations and transferring the speed requirement to fast measurement of qubits. We show that a 3D cluster state suitable for fault-tolerant measurement-based quantum computing can be implemented on a 2D array of ion traps. We propose the projective measurement of ions via multi-photon photoionization for nanosecond operation and discuss the viability of such a scheme for Ca ions.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Fluctuations in the level density of a Fermi gas

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    We present a theory that accurately describes the counting of excited states of a noninteracting fermionic gas. At high excitation energies the results reproduce Bethe's theory. At low energies oscillatory corrections to the many--body density of states, related to shell effects, are obtained. The fluctuations depend non-trivially on energy and particle number. Universality and connections with Poisson statistics and random matrix theory are established for regular and chaotic single--particle motion.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur

    Weak Field Hall Resistance and Effective Carrier Density Through Metal-Insulator Transition in Si-MOS Structures

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    We studied the weak field Hall voltage in 2D electron layers in Si-MOS structures with different mobilities, through the metal-insulator transition. In the vicinity of the critical density on the metallic side of the transition, we have found weak deviations (about 6-20 %) of the Hall voltage from its classical value. The deviations do not correlate with the strong temperature dependence of the diagonal resistivity rho_{xx}(T). The smallest deviation in R_{xy} was found in the highest mobility sample exhibiting the largest variation in the diagonal resistivity \rho_{xx} with temperature (by a factor of 5).Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, RevTe

    Particle size segregation in granular flow in silos

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    Segregation and layering of alumina in storage silos are investigated, with a view to predicting output quality versus time, given known variations in input quality on emplacement. A variety of experiments were conducted, existing relevant publications were reviewed, and the basis for an algorithm for predicting the effect of withdrawing from a central flowing region, in combination with variations in quality due to geometric, layering and segregation effects, is described in this report

    Hierarchical Model for the Evolution of Cloud Complexes

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    The structure of cloud complexes appears to be well described by a "tree structure" representation when the image is partitioned into "clouds". In this representation, the parent-child relationships are assigned according to containment. Based on this picture, a hierarchical model for the evolution of Cloud Complexes, including star formation, is constructed, that follows the mass evolution of each sub-structure by computing its mass exchange (evaporation or condensation) with its parent and children, which depends on the radiation density at the interphase. For the set of parameters used as a reference model, the system produces IMFs with a maximum at too high mass (~2 M_sun) and the characteristic times for evolution seem too long. We show that these properties can be improved by adjusting model parameters. However, the emphasis here is to illustrate some general properties of this nonlinear model for the star formation process. Notwithstanding the simplifications involved, the model reveals an essential feature that will likely remain if additional physical processes are included. That is: the detailed behavior of the system is very sensitive to variations on the initial and external conditions, suggesting that a "universal" IMF is very unlikely. When an ensemble of IMFs corresponding to a variety of initial or external conditions is examined, the slope of the IMF at high masses shows variations comparable to the range derived from observational data. (Abridged)Comment: Latex, 29 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in Ap

    Remote sensing applications to resource problems in South Dakota

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    There are no author-identified significant results in this report

    Surface code quantum computing by lattice surgery

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    In recent years, surface codes have become a leading method for quantum error correction in theoretical large scale computational and communications architecture designs. Their comparatively high fault-tolerant thresholds and their natural 2-dimensional nearest neighbour (2DNN) structure make them an obvious choice for large scale designs in experimentally realistic systems. While fundamentally based on the toric code of Kitaev, there are many variants, two of which are the planar- and defect- based codes. Planar codes require fewer qubits to implement (for the same strength of error correction), but are restricted to encoding a single qubit of information. Interactions between encoded qubits are achieved via transversal operations, thus destroying the inherent 2DNN nature of the code. In this paper we introduce a new technique enabling the coupling of two planar codes without transversal operations, maintaining the 2DNN of the encoded computer. Our lattice surgery technique comprises splitting and merging planar code surfaces, and enables us to perform universal quantum computation (including magic state injection) while removing the need for braided logic in a strictly 2DNN design, and hence reduces the overall qubit resources for logic operations. Those resources are further reduced by the use of a rotated lattice for the planar encoding. We show how lattice surgery allows us to distribute encoded GHZ states in a more direct (and overhead friendly) manner, and how a demonstration of an encoded CNOT between two distance 3 logical states is possible with 53 physical qubits, half of that required in any other known construction in 2D.Comment: Published version. 29 pages, 18 figure

    Enhanced Optical Cooling of Ion Beams for LHC

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    The possibility of the enhanced optical cooling (EOC) of Lead ions in LHC is investigated. Non-exponential feature of cooling and requirements to the ring lattice, optical and laser systems are discussed. Comparison with optical stochastic cooling (OSC) is represented.Comment: 4 page
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